"A visceral, heart-pounding conclusion that refuses to choose between hope and honesty. Peterson has crafted something rare: cyberpunk with a soul." - Kirkus Reviews
"Sharp's disintegration is rendered with brutal clarity-every neural misfire, every memory hemorrhage feels devastatingly real. This is body horror meets philosophical thriller, and it's magnificent." - Locus Magazine
"The Petra/Sharp dynamic is the beating heart beneath the chrome. Peterson understands that the best science fiction is always about what makes us human-and what we're willing to sacrifice to stay that way." - NPR Books
"Imagine Philip K. Dick's paranoia filtered through Richard K. Morgan's violence, William Gibson's poetry and an emotional core all its own. Peterson's iteration rivals the best identity-fracture narratives in the genre." - Strange Horizons
"The action sequences crackle with kinetic energy, but it's the quiet moments-a shared flask, a forehead touch, a rooftop garden-that will haunt you long after the last page." - io9
"Peterson doesn't just ask 'what does it cost to be free?' He makes you feel every credit spent, every neural pathway burned, every choice that can't be unmade. This is cyberpunk that understands sacrifice isn't noble-it's necessary." - The Verge
"The Palace sequences are genuinely unsettling-a digital panopticon that feels both alien and inevitable. Kaine is that rarest of antagonists: one you might actually agree with, even as you root for his defeat." - Tor.com
"Volume Three delivers everything the series promised and more. The staged awakening concept is brilliant-a solution that acknowledges there are no clean answers, only better questions. This is science fiction for adults who remember that hope is a verb, not a feeling." - Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
"Second Petra is a masterclass in unreliable narration-a hallucination that speaks truth, a ghost that won't lie. She's the voice of every shortcut Sharp refuses to take, and she's absolutely terrifying." - Lightspeed Magazine
"The ending made me cry, which I did not expect from a book about neural implants and corporate dystopia. But that's Peterson's gift: he makes you care about people in a world designed to treat them as inventory." - BookPage
"If you've been waiting for cyberpunk to evolve beyond noir pastiche and tech-fetish, this is it. Peterson has written a thriller that's also a meditation on autonomy, memory, and what we owe to strangers. It's Altered Carbon meets The Leftovers, and it's essential reading." - Library Journal (Starred Review)
"The prose is a scalpel-precise, sharp, unforgiving. Every sentence does work. Every image lands. This is writing that trusts its reader and rewards that trust with something genuinely moving." - SF Signal
"Seventy-three thousand people in pods. One courier with a briefcase and a dying brain. The math shouldn't work, but Peterson makes you believe-not in miracles, but in the stubborn human refusal to accept that some problems are unsolvable." - Clarkesworld Magazine
"The rooftop garden epilogue is perfect. After all the violence, all the neural fire, all the impossible choices-two people planting seeds in toxic air, knowing they might not grow, planting them anyway. That's not just good science fiction. That's literature." - The New York Times Book Review